Chimera

It’s been a long time since I last left the cinema feeling so transported I felt the need to hold on to something —  an umbrella, a wall, a supporting hand, anything — on stepping out onto the pavement. In her much-hailed Chimera, Alice Rohrwacher creates a near-perfect illusion, fiendishly difficult to categorise. I suppose that’s in the nature of an illusion. The film is an exercise at once in realism and subversion. It made me think of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead. Or perhaps it was just the response it evoked in me that called forth the association. On the face of it, Chimera is about crooks and buffoons. There is, however, an intensity of credible life in it that makes it enchanting. One emerges feeling intensely alive. There are plenty of jokes. Good ones. There is Sophoclesian seriousness. Performances are fantastic, some by amateurs, others by legends. Chimera is about so many things that to talk about a plot is impossible. Yet it is linear and coherent. It is at once italianissimo and universal. I loved this film without quite being able to say why. I can only recommend it.

 

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